Mark Balderston, an engineer with Encana, a natural gas producer, points to a well pad completion site near Rifle, Colo.

David GilkeyNPR

Listen

Listening...

/

Originally published on April 18, 2012 6:34 pm

The Environmental Protection Agency announced new rules Wednesday to control the problem of air pollution coming from wells being drilled by the booming oil and natural gas drilling industry.

Currently, waste products from the drilling operations, which include a mix of chemicals, sand and water, can be pumped into open enclosures or pits, where toxic substances can make their way into the air. The new rules will require this fluid to be captured by 2015, and flared — or burned off — in the meantime.

Some states, including Colorado, already require companies to do what the EPA will soon require everywhere.

Mark Balderston, who started working in the oil and gas industry 40 years ago, says that for most of his career, getting gas out of the ground has been an assault on his senses.

Balderston, who is now a senior engineer overseeing well sites in Garfield County, Colo., is referring to the messiest parts of the operation, called well completion. It's the centerpiece of the EPA's new rules, and is the part of the process that pollutes the air the most. After a well is drilled, all the gas, mixed with water and other substances used to drill the well, comes gushing out.

In recent years, completions have become even messier because companies have started using an engineering technique called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which requires a lot more material to open up gas wells, and subsequently creates a lot more waste.

The general practice has been to send that waste into an open pit and let the gas coming up go directly into the air.

"A lot of that would be vented off — it's just let go, it's not contained anywhere," Balderston says. "And that's not good." Balderston says that venting could go on for weeks. But Colorado has been doing something different: "Now, it's all captured," he says.

Balderston is referring to a technique the industry calls "green completions" — that means the stuff gushing out of the well is collected right away. Colorado started requiring this on some wells a few years ago, as did Wyoming. The EPA's new rule will require them around the country.

A Rapidly Changing Industry

At a green completion currently under way a few hours from Denver, Balderston points out a jumble of pipes, valves and tanks about the size of a UPS truck.

"The whole flow of the whole well — gas, water, everything — comes in one pipe," Balderston says. The equipment separates the gas from the water and the solids. "Basically oil floats on the water and gas floats on all that. It pretty much separates itself out all on its own."

Once the natural gas is separated and collected, it goes into the pipeline system, where Balderston's company, Encana, can sell it. So gas that was previously burned in a flare or vented as waste is now profit.

Though there are costs associated with the equipment and people needed to run it, "the benefits far outweigh those costs in the long run," Balderston says.

But he says green completions and other recent improvements greatly reduce the industry's impact on the environment.

"You just can't begin to imagine how fast things have changed [in the industry], just in the last few years — to the good," he says. "All of us guys that work out here feel more comfortable in what we do now because of that. These changes are positive for all of us."

The EPA says capturing these materials will reduce smog and protect people from toxic pollutants like benzene that can cause cancer. The new rule gives companies until 2015 to start doing green completions, and exempts certain kinds of wells.

But even with the caveats, some companies still oppose the EPA's rules: They say states and not the federal government should get to decide whether rules like these are necessary.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Melissa Block.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

I'm Audie Cornish. We begin this hour with the drilling boom here in the U.S. for oil and natural gas. That's good news for the economy, but it's also polluting our air. So today, the Environmental Protection Agency announced new rules to control the problem. NPR's Elizabeth Shogren visited a gas well in western Colorado. The state already makes companies do what the EPA will soon require everywhere.

ELIZABETH SHOGREN, BYLINE: Mark Balderston first worked in the oil and gas industry 40 years ago.

MARK BALDERSTON: Yeah. I was a roughneck when I was 14 out in the eastern Colorado.

SHOGREN: These days, Balderston is a senior engineer with a gas company. I met up with him at a well site, a three-hour drive west of Denver. He says, for most of his career, getting gas out of the ground has been an assault on his senses.

BALDERSTON: It's going to give you a real heavy, industrial kind of like garage kind of smell almost - real intense.

SHOGREN: He's talking about one of the messiest parts. It's called well completion, and it's the centerpiece of the EPA's new rules. It's the part of the process that pollutes the air the most. It happens after a well is drilled. All the gas, mixed with water and whatever else was used to drill the well, comes gushing out. Completions in recent years have become even messier. Companies started using an engineering technique called hydraulic fracturing or fracking. It requires a lot more material to open up gas wells, which creates a lot more waste. The general practice has been to send that waste into an open pit and let the gas coming up go directly into the air.

BALDERSTON: And a lot of that would be vented off. It's just let go. There's nothing - it's not contained anywhere. That's not good.

SHOGREN: Balderston says that venting could go on for weeks, before the well is hooked up to a pipeline. But Colorado has been doing something different.

BALDERSTON: Now, it's all captured.

SHOGREN: He's talking about something the industry calls green completions. That means the stuff gushing out of the well is collected right away. Colorado started requiring them on some wells a few years ago. So did Wyoming. EPA's new rule will require them around the country. Balderston shows me a green completion underway.

(SOUNDBITE OF MACHINERY)

SHOGREN: Next to us, there's a jumble of pipes, valves and tanks about the size of a UPS truck.

BALDERSTON: There's a whole flow of the whole well - gas, water, everything - comes in one pipe. It comes in right on this one side here.

SHOGREN: This equipment separates the gas from the water and solids.

(SOUNDBITE OF MACHINERY)

BALDERSTON: It's a lot - what you're hearing there, that's the water.

SHOGREN: Balderston says gravity does most of the work.

BALDERSTON: Basically, you know, oil floats on the water, and gas floats on all that. It pretty much separates itself out just on its own.

SHOGREN: Now that the natural gas is separated and collected, Balderston's company, Encana, can sell it. So the gas that was burned in a flare or vented into the air is now profit.

BALDERSTON: It goes into the pipeline system and off it goes.

SHOGREN: How much more does it cost Encana to capture the water and the sand and the gas instead of flaring it?

BALDERSTON: There is associated cost with equipment and the people to run it, but the benefits out - far outweigh those costs in the long run.

SHOGREN: Encana makes more money selling all that gas than it spends on the additional equipment and personnel. But Balderston says there are other reasons to do it.

BALDERSTON: You just can't begin to imagine how fast things have changed just in the last few years to the good. You know, I mean, all of us guys that work out here feel more comfortable in what we do now because of that. You know, these changes are all positive for all of us.

SHOGREN: The EPA says capturing these materials will reduce smog and protect people from toxic pollutants like benzene that can cause cancer. The EPA rules give companies until 2015 to do green completions and exempts some kinds of wells. But even with the caveats, some companies still oppose EPA's rules. They say states and not the federal government should get to decide whether rules like these are necessary. Elizabeth Shogren, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright National Public Radio.